HomehouseEpstein victims will return to Capitol Hill next week

Epstein victims will return to Capitol Hill next week

houseOctober 3, 2025
2 min read
Epstein victims will return to Capitol Hill next week
Victims of Jeffrey Epstein will return to Capitol Hill next week, when they will be hosted by a bipartisan group of lawmakers pushing the Trump administration to release the government’s files on the ...
Reading Settings

Victims of Jeffrey Epstein will return to Capitol Hill next week, when they will be hosted by a bipartisan group of lawmakers pushing the Trump administration to release the government’s files on the sex offender. 

Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) had staged a public event with Epstein survivors early last month as part of their effort to drum up support for a discharge petition designed to force the administration to release the secret documents. 

The trio has arranged a similar event outside the Capitol on Oct. 8. 

The discharge petition has 217 signatures, one shy of the number needed to force a vote on legislation requiring the Justice Department to release the files. But Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva (D), who recently won a special election in Arizona, is expected to provide the decisive 218th endorsement whenever she’s sworn in. 

The precise date of her swearing-in, however, remains an open question and a point of contention. Democrats have been pushing House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) to perform that ceremony this week during two pro forma sessions staged by the House while the chamber is in recess. 

Johnson, who had sworn in Republicans during pro forma sessions earlier in the year, has refused to do so. The move has sparked howls from Democrats, who say Johnson — who is opposed to the legislation forcing the administration to release the Epstein files — is stalling to delay the success of the discharge petition. 

Adding to the uncertainty of the timeline was speculation Friday that GOP leaders would also cancel the House’s scheduled return to Washington next week, potentially delaying the swearing-in even further.

Source: The Hill - News

Share this article

Related Articles

Jeffries says Democrats will ‘definitely’ win back House control in 2026
Nov 106 months ago

Jeffries says Democrats will ‘definitely’ win back House control in 2026

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said on Sunday he’s confident Democrats will take back the House in the 2026 midterm elections and is optimistic about his party’s chances to win back co...

{"_":"https://thehill.com/?p=5598012","$":{"isPermaLink":"false"}}2 min read
Read More
These are the 8 Senate Democrats who voted to end the shutdown
Nov 106 months ago

These are the 8 Senate Democrats who voted to end the shutdown

Eight members of the Senate Democratic caucus voted Sunday evening to proceed to a House-passed continuing resolution, taking a major step toward ending the 40-day shutdown. The Senate voted 60-40 to ...

{"_":"https://thehill.com/?p=5598031","$":{"isPermaLink":"false"}}6 min read
Read More
House Republican predicts shutdown will last beyond Thanksgiving
Nov 086 months ago

House Republican predicts shutdown will last beyond Thanksgiving

Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) on Friday said the government shutdown, the longest in modern U.S. history, will stretch past Thanksgiving. "I think it's going to go on after Thanksgiving," Burchett told ...

{"_":"https://thehill.com/?p=5596199","$":{"isPermaLink":"false"}}3 min read
Read More